All eyes on UPA meet: Pranab or a 'dark horse'?

News18

First published: June 15, 2012, 7:53 AM IST
| Updated: June 15, 2012

The NDA is also set to meet at 11 am at senior leader LK Advani's residence to discuss the Presidential candidate.

New Delhi: It is a crucial day ahead for the Presidential race. The UPA will meet on Friday and the Congress is likely to come out with its Presidential nominee. Trinamool Congress chief and West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee will skip the meet as she feels there is no point in attending the meet because the candidate has already been decided.

All eyes are now on whether Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee will be the Congress's Presidential candidate or if a 'dark horse' will emerge. In a cautious move, the Congress delayed its UPA meet to Friday evening in order to meet more allies.

Meanwhile, the NDA is also set to meet at 11 am at senior leader LK Advani's residence to discuss the situation. The BJP has, however, said that it was waiting for the UPA to come out with a nominee first.

The race to the President office on Thursday witnessed lots of politics and speculation, but no decisions appeared in sight. A day after the royal snub by Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee along with Samajwadi Party supremo Mulayam Singh Yadav, the Congress worked on all fronts to isolate the West Bengal Chief Minister.

The party in fact began attempts to build consensus within the UPA on its choices, with Pranab Mukherjee remaining its first choice. The Congress also came out strongly in defence of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh insisting that he would continue in the job and finish his term till 2014, pointing that the party had made the commitment to the people of the country in the beginning of the tenure of the UPA-II itself.

Mamata Banerjee, maintaining her tough stand, announced later in the day that she would skip that meet and even dared the Congress to drop her out of the UPA if they found her to be a liability. She even met Mulayam Singh again and claimed that former APJ Abdul Kalam was their first choice for the President. This, even as reports said that Kalam told Mamata he would contest in the poll only if he was assured a 60 per cent majority.

Sources, however, suggested differences between the Trinamool Congress chief and the Samajwadi Party supremo. According to sources, while Mamata made her final choice for Kalam, Mulayam wanted all three candidates named earlier. The Samajwadi Party chief is likely to clarify his stand before the media on Friday.

Amidst the drama emerged the name of a dark horse in the form of Lok Sabha Speaker Meira Kumar, whose name is likely to be discussed at the UPA meeting on Friday along with those of Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee and Vice President Hamid Ansari.

While clamour grew for Abdul Kalam and Pranad Mukherjee, the BJD maintained that its choice for the President's post remained NCP leader PA Sangma.

With many names in the contest, the race still remains complicated. Therefore, all eyes will be on the NDA and the UPA meets to see whether the two come up with two clear candidates for the President's post.